Royal Mint rejected Roald Dahl coin over antisemitic views | Guardian

Roald Dahl

Plans to celebrate the life of Roald Dahl with a commemorative coin were rejected because of concerns about the author’s antisemitic views, it can be revealed.

Official papers obtained by the Guardian using freedom of information laws also disclose that the Royal Mint dropped proposals to issue a coin to mark the centenary of Dahl’s birth because he was “not regarded as an author of the highest reputation”.

The decision is set out in the minutes of a Royal Mint sub-committee meeting held in 2014, where the company instead opted for coins commemorating William Shakespeare and Beatrix Potter.

The decision was made despite the Royal Mail honouring the children’s author with a set of commemorative stamps celebrating his books, many of which have been adapted into films. These include Matilda, Charlie and the Chocolate Factory and the BFG.

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Jeremy Corbyn has lit a fire of Jew-hate that is now beyond his control | The JC

UK Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn

‘Corbyn has said and done things that can reasonably be described as antisemitic,’ writes Dave Rich

A little over three years ago, shortly before Jeremy Corbyn became leader of the Labour Party, this newspaper set out seven questions for him to answer regarding people and organisations who he had supported, assisted or spoken alongside. It was a gruesome list of terrorists, Holocaust deniers and antisemites, and it was vital and urgent for Mr Corbyn to answer these questions satisfactorily, the JC urged, lest he “be regarded from the day of his election as an enemy of Britain’s Jewish community”.

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UK PM vows to defend Jews and Israel, in dig at Labour’s Corbyn | Reuters

Theresa May

EDINBURGH – Prime Minister Theresa May pledged on Monday to protect British Jewish identity and Israel’s right to defend itself, in an attack on opposition leader Jeremy Corbyn in the run-up to his Labour Party conference next weekend.

May told a United Jewish Israel Appeal dinner she was “sickened” by the idea that some Jews questioned whether Britain was a safe place to raise their children.

Labour has been angrily divided this year over pockets of anti-Semitism which Corbyn himself has acknowledged. Critics suggest he should step down for failing to tackle the issue.

A poll in Britain’s Jewish Chronicle earlier this month said that 40 percent of Jews would consider emigrating if Corbyn won power in a national election.

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The English are masters of irony – just look at Jeremy Corbyn | NZ Listener

UK Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn

It was recently revealed that Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn said that Zionists “don’t understand English irony”, which is kind of ironic.

What are the English most proud of? Not their history, their culture or their global achievements. In these days of postcolonial reappraisal, all that is tarnished, compromised or, at the very least, not something to boast about. No, the one national characteristic that is guaranteed to swell English hearts is that of irony.

The English like to think of themselves as masters of the slippery form. Yes, the Germans may make reliable cars, the Italians stylish clothes and the French fine wine, but they don’t have our ironic way of seeing the world.

Yet even seasoned connoisseurs of the outlook are beginning to struggle under the weight of ironies piling up, like some huge motorway accident, on the British political scene.

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The west’s antisemitism crisis | MelaniePhillips.com

Melanie Phillips

Antisemitism is now a major issue in the West.

In Britain, there are continuing convulsions over rampant antisemitism in the Labour Party. In America, there was outrage over the presence of the virulent Jew-hater Louis Farrakhan at Aretha Franklin’s funeral. In France and other European countries, Jews are under siege from violent Muslims.

The really disturbing thing, though, is that so many are not outraged by this. For a troubling number of people, antisemitism is no longer considered a big deal. Either it is denied or minimized, as in Europe, or it is relegated down the pecking order of prejudices.

Consider. The past few months have produced an apparently unstoppable stream of poisonous bigotry among Labour Party members and supporters directed at both Israel and Jewish people.

The party’s far-left leader, Jeremy Corbyn, has himself been revealed time and again as not only supporting Israel’s terrorist attackers, but defaming Israel as wanton killers and racists. He also championed an obscene mural depicting hook-nosed Jews manipulating the world’s finances on the backs of the exploited poor.

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The rise of British anti-Semitism | Otago Daily Times

UK Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn

British Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn is embroiled in a conflict which threatens to not only see him challenged for his position, but also split the party when it should be riding high in the polls.

On Saturday, Mr Corbyn apologised for the hurt inflicted on Jewish people by the Labour anti-Semitism row as he vowed to speed up scores of disciplinary cases.

In a video message released on social media, he said working with the Jewish population to rebuild trust was a ”vital priority”. Labour has been slow in processing disciplinary cases of, mostly online anti-Semitic abuse by party members. The party wants to accelerate this process – Labour must never be the home for such people.

His public statement on the divisive issue came after weeks of difficult headlines and virtual silence from Labour’s front bench. Labour MP for Barking Margaret Hodge confronted Mr Corbyn in Parliament and told him to his face what she and many others are feeling.

Under his leadership, the Labour Party is perceived by most Jews, thousands of party members and millions of members of the public, as anti-Semitic and racist.

Ms Hodge, who describes herself as a secular, immigrant Jew, said anti-Semitism appeared to have become the legitimate price the leadership was willing to pay for pursuing the longstanding cause of Palestinians in the Middle East.

Complaints to the Labour Party about anti-Semitism from party members have been dealt with in a desultory manner. In the middle of last month, Labour’s national executive committee agreed its own definition of anti-Semitism. Instead of adopting the international definition agreed in 2016 in the wake of the rise of anti-Semitism across Europe, the party chose to omit key examples used in that definition.

The British Labour Party is not alone in battling anti-Semitism. The childhood home of the late Elie Wiesel, the Holocaust survivor, renowned author and winner of the Nobel Prize for Peace, was vandalised with anti-Semitic graffiti. The house in the Romanian town of Sighetu Marmatiei serves as a museum. Anonymous vandals scrawled on the house the words: ”Pedophile. Jewish Nazi who is in hell with Hitler”.

In New Zealand, Unite Union official Mike Treen was detained in Israel after he took part in an aid convoy to Gaza. Mr Treen was allegedly attacked, alongside other international campaigners, on the ship Al Awda. Green MP Marama Davidson also suffered the same treatment on an earlier trip.

There is a rise in anti-Israel sentiment globally, fuelled in part by hard left-wing activists who are taking the side of Palestine. Israel says it is defending its borders, surrounded as it is by Arab nations.

Gruesome images of children being hit by Israeli rockets can be found easily in mainstream media reports, often without the balance of why Israel decided to launch the attack. Israel’s voice needs to be heard.

The scrape Mr Corbyn now finds himself in will not go away easily as Jewish groups accuse him of lecturing them on the issue and being ideologically hostile to the International Holocaust Remembrance Alliance’s definition of anti-Semitism.

It remains unclear whether the Labour leader is ready to adopt the code. The Jewish community has repeatedly said the party must act, rather than just talk, about the problem.

In an article for The Guardian published on Saturday, Mr Corbyn said he felt confident outstanding issues over the definition of anti-Semitism could be resolved.

The British Labour Party is an example to politicians around the world of the dangers of ignoring the growing global problem of anti-Semitism affecting both the political left and right.

With the Holocaust remaining in living memory, world leaders must show more empathy to the horrors the Jewish people have faced and continue to face.

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